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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: CMS Media Relations  CMS
Announces New Model Opportunity for Medicaid Managed Care Organizations
Serving Beneficiaries Dually Eligible for Medicare and Medicaid New
opportunity offers a more holistic approach to care for individuals, The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Center
for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation is announcing a new opportunity to
enable Medicaid Managed Care Organizations (MCOs) to better serve enrollees
who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. This new Model opportunity
is the first CMS initiative designed to harness the power of Medicaid MCOs to
coordinate Medicare and Medicaid services and improve health outcomes for the
population of dually eligible beneficiaries who are in both Medicaid managed
care and Medicare fee-for-service (FFS).  Currently, Medicaid MCOs do not have an incentive to coordinate
care in a way that reduces Medicare FFS costs for dually eligible
beneficiaries. By better aligning incentives, the new opportunity for
MCOs to participate in the Global and Professional Options of the Direct
Contracting Model seeks to encourage Medicaid MCOs to partner with providers
and suppliers and implement care coordination programs that can improve
quality and reduce Medicare FFS costs. “Beneficiaries eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid are
some of our most vulnerable neighbors and friends, and the COVID-19 pandemic
has made this abundantly clear as this population had some of the highest
rates of hospitalizations for COVID-19,†said CMS Administrator Seema
Verma. “For too long we have struggled to deliver acceptable outcomes for
this vulnerable population, but today’s model is a game changer. It
represents a significant step toward addressing these longstanding issues and
ensuring they receive the coordinated care they rightfully deserve.†Some examples of the actions MCOs and their affiliates serving
as MCO-based Direct Contracting Entities (DCEs)—organizations that
participate in Direct Contracting via a participation agreement with
CMS—could take to better serve dually eligible beneficiaries include:
In 2019, 12.2 million Americans were concurrently enrolled in
both Medicare and Medicaid. Dually eligible individuals are an especially
high needs population, with 70 percent of dually eligible individuals having
three or more chronic conditions and more than 40 percent having at least one
mental health diagnosis. These dually eligible individuals must navigate
two separate programs for their healthcare: Medicare for the coverage of most
preventive, primary, and acute health care services and drugs, and Medicaid
for coverage of long-term services and supports, certain behavioral health
services, and for help with Medicare premiums and cost sharing. A lack of
alignment and cohesiveness between Medicare and Medicaid can often lead to
fragmented and episodic care for dually eligible individuals. This can result
in reduced quality of care for these individuals as well as increased costs
to both the Medicare and Medicare programs. Dually eligible individuals
account for approximately 20 percent of all Medicare enrollees, but more than
one-third of Medicare costs. CMS believes that dually eligible individuals can benefit from
more integrated systems of care that meet all of their needs — primary,
acute, long-term, behavioral, and social — in a high quality,
cost-effective manner. This new opportunity to participate in Direct
Contracting creates the incentives and flexibilities for Medicaid MCOs to
better integrate care for these beneficiaries. To ensure that the participation of MCO-based DCEs in Direct
Contracting aligns with states’ plans to better serve dually eligible
beneficiaries, MCO-based DCEs will be required to obtain a letter of support
from their state Medicaid agency to participate in the model. CMS will
track both Medicare and Medicaid expenditures in order to ensure there is no
cost-shifting from Medicare to Medicaid or vice versa. In early 2021, the Innovation Center expects to release a
Request for Applications (RFA) for all Professional and Global DCE types,
including MCO-based DCEs. This will be the first Direct Contracting RFA to
include MCO-based DCEs. MCO-based DCEs will begin participating in the model
in January 2022. For more information, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/direct-contracting-model-professional-and-global-options-medicaid-managed-care-organization-mco ### Â |
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Thursday, December 17, 2020
CMS NEWS: CMS Announces New Model Opportunity for Medicaid Managed Care Organizations Serving Beneficiaries Dually Eligible for Medicare and Medicaid
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